Song of the Day: Kylie Rae Harris – “Big Ol’ Heartache.”

Check Out The Wylie Country Singer’s Ode to Dating Bad Boys and Self-Inflicted Broken Hearts.

Welcome to Song of the Day, where we hip you to all the new local releases you should be caring about. By highlighting one new North Texas-sprung tune every week day, our hope is that you’ll find something new to love about the rich and abundant DFW music scene five days a week.

Kylie Rae Harris – “Big Ol’ Heartache.”RIYL: Continuing to make the same mistakes.What else you should know: With time, comes perspective. It’s something Wylie-native Kylie Rae Harris has recently come to grips with, developing an understanding her own mortality during a rough recent chapter.

After spending a few years in Nashville, Harris is back home in Texas, with a new self-titled mainstream country EP in hand that’s informed by having a baby, and going through the heartbreak of losing her father. In the album’s closing track, she pens a letter for her six-year-old daughter to read 20 years from now, when, like Kylie she realizes that parents are just humans that make mistakes.

Elsewhere, like on the lead single below, she equates the cyclical nature of toxic relationships to being addicted to alcohol.

As she sings in the chorus: “Big ol’ heartache / Yeah, that’s what you are / Big ol’ heartache / A hangover from the start / And it hurts ’cause I was a fool to let you in / Big ol’ heartache / But I’d do it all again.”

Not being able to stop dating bad boys, and/or continuing to return to an abusive relationship, she sings, is like drinking too heavily night after night even though you know the massive hangover is inevitable.

“I have a type. My step-dad says my type doesn’t work. He’s not wrong,” she recently told Taste of Country. “Honestly, that’s what this song’s about. Fall for the bad boy, no surprise it doesn’t work out, but I continue to do it again. And again. And again. Some fools never learn.”

Cory Graves is the Associate Editor at Central Track. He enjoys not only writing about Dallas and its local music scene, but being a part of it as a member of the band Vandoliers. Courtney Love once referred to him onstage as “my fucking therapist,” which he immediately put on his resume.